The photographer who snapped this picture says he was too far away to pull the victim to safety. (TheYoungTurks)

(Newser)
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The freelance photographer who snapped the New York Post's much-maligned front-page picture of Ki Suk Han seconds before he was killed by a subway train is stepping up his defense against "armchair critics" who say he should have been helping rather than shooting. In a rambling piece in the Post, R. Umar Abbasi reiterates his claim that he "kept shooting and flashing, hoping the train driver would see," and that "the victim was so far away from me ... too far away to reach him." He also says that the man who pushed the victim was running in his direction, and Abbasi was afraid he'd be shoved as well.

Abbasi then points his finger at fellow bystanders, saying, "the sad part is, there were people who were close to the victim, who watched and didn’t do anything." He says after the train stopped, he helped fend off people trying to take pictures and video, so that a medic could perform CPR. He says he didn't look at his own photos until late that night, but that when he finally did, his "heart started racing. It was terrible, seeing it happen all over again. I didn’t sleep at all. All I can hear is that man’s head against that train: Boom! Boom! Boom!" Abbasi also appeared on the Today show today, Gawker notes, defending his sale of the photos: "I would call it licensing to use it," he said. "Selling a photograph of this nature sounds morbid. I licensed these photographs. (How the image was used) is not my decision."

Yes, you kept taking photos trying to warn the driver... and to make sure you got a good shot to sell to the first tasteless news group you could find.

toomanycars

Dec 5, 2012 9:53 PM CST

He was too far. Look at the photo again. Those trains go fast and they cant stop fast because of momentum of their mass. He may have thought that if he got over there and they locked arms, if the train got him that he might go in too. What was horrific was the publishing of the paper and the caption "This man is going to die-doomed!" That was shocking.

Chatsworth

Dec 5, 2012 7:48 PM CST

If someone leaned over to help, they mighta got pushed onto the tracks too.I thought those subway trains could stop quickly,that one drunk woman who fell in front of a subway train didn' get hit by it, it stopped in time.